Eastern Eye (UK)

India farmers to step up stir after deadly clashes

BJP JUNIOR MINISTER’S SON BOOKED AS NINE DIE IN UTTAR PRADESH VIOLENCE

-

FARMERS in India vowed on Monday (4) to intensify their months-long protest against laws aimed at liberalisi­ng agricultur­e as tension flared a day after nine people were killed in clashes between growers and ruling party supporters.

Four of the eight were killed when a car linked to a senior ruling party official crashed into protesters in Uttar Pradesh state, protest leaders said.

The farmers had gathered for a demonstrat­ion in Uttar Pradesh state’s Lakhimpur Kheri district, about 130 km north of the state’s capital Lucknow, where the junior home affairs minister Ajay Mishra and the state’s deputy chief minister Keshav Prasad Maurya had been due to visit.

Police said they were investigat­ing the crash and had registered a case against 13 people, including Mishra’s son.

An alliance of protest groups called in a petition to India’s president Ram Nath Kovind on Monday for a court-supervised investigat­ion of the violence.

“We’ll intensify our agitation in Uttar Pradesh and other parts of the country to highlight the plight of innocent farmers,” said Dharmendra Malik, a senior leader of the Bharatiya Kisan Union.

“The government might try to discredit the 10-month-long movement, but we will remain peaceful in our struggle,” Malik said.

Uttar Pradesh chief minister Yogi Adityanath called the incident “very sad and unfortunat­e” as he appealed for calm.

“Before jumping to any conclusion­s, please wait for the ongoing investigat­ion and the action thereafter,” he tweeted late last Sunday (3) in Hindi.

Angry protesters set fire to several cars and at least five more people, four of them supporters of the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), were killed.

On Monday, the protesters kept the bodies of the four dead farmers in glass cases for display around the protest site.

Police banned gatherings, cut off mobile internet services, sent extra forces and detained several opposition figures on their way to the scene, including Priyanka Gandhi from the Congress party. In Lucknow, dozens of police detained local Congress chief Akhilesh Yadav outside his home.

Dozens of opposition supporters staged a protest in the city and set fire to at least one police vehicle, TV pictures showed. Protests organised by opposition parties also took place in New Delhi and Bangalore.

Agricultur­e has long been a political

minefield and employs some two-thirds of India’s 1.3 billion population.

The legislatio­n the farmers object to, introduced in September last year, deregulate­s the sector, allowing farmers to sell produce to buyers beyond government­regulated wholesale markets, where growers are assured of a minimum price.

Small farmers say the changes make them vulnerable to competitio­n from big business, and that they could eventually lose price supports for staples such as wheat and rice.

The government says reform of the sector, which accounts for about 15 per cent of the $2.7 trillion (£2tn) economy, mean new opportunit­ies and better prices for farmers.

Farmers said the car that crashed into the protesters was owned by a son of junior home minister Mishra. Mishra said his son was not present at the incident, but added that a car driven by “our driver” lost control

and hit the farmers after they threw stones at the car and attacked it with sticks and sword. The son, Ashish Mishra, also denied being present. Police in Uttar Pradesh, ruled by prime minister Narendra Modi’s party, said the son was one of the 13 people against whom a case had been registered.

India’s longest-running farm protests pose a risk for the re-election prospects of prime minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party when Uttar Pradesh, India’s most populous state, goes to the polls early next year.

Since last Sunday (3), several opposition politician­s have tried to reach the Lakhimpur Kheri sugar cane-growing district where the violence took place.

“For many months, farmers have been speaking out, saying that they are being wronged but the government is not willing to listen,” said Congress party leader Priyanka Gandhi Vadra.

 ?? ?? © Money Sharma/AFP/Getty Images
TENSIONS: A family member shows a picture of Gurvinder Singh, who was killed in the clash in Lakhimpur Kheri, Uttar Pradesh, on Monday (4); (inset left) Youth Congress activists protest in New Delhi
© Money Sharma/AFP/Getty Images TENSIONS: A family member shows a picture of Gurvinder Singh, who was killed in the clash in Lakhimpur Kheri, Uttar Pradesh, on Monday (4); (inset left) Youth Congress activists protest in New Delhi

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom